Clements says Texans must concentrate on state's future — Page 3 A&M seniors' Williams, Toney anxiously awaiting NFL call — Page 7 ■mpmh Texas A&M V A The Battalion .83 No. 144 USPS 075360 8 pages College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 29, 1986 ioviets report nuclear reactor damaged ue MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet pi said Monday that a nuclear [dent damaged an atomic reactor te Chernobyl power plant in the l aine. Radiation reported up to 0 imes above normal swept across Tand, Denmark and Sweden, re than 750 miles away. Judapest Radio in Hungaiy re lied early Tuesdav that there injuries from the accident and I that the power plant was lo- atdat the conjunction of two riv- near the reservoir that supplies iiu.acity of 2.4 million people and (capital of the Ukraine. The official Soviet news agency, as, said only that people “af- fd" were being aided, but did not say whether there were injuries or deaths, when the accident oc curred, nor the exact location of the plant. Tass said it was the first nuclear accident in the Soviet Union and a government commission was ap pointed, an indication that it was se rious. Lars Erik de Geer of Sweden’s De fense Research Agency, said, “It must have been a relatively big acci dent, since we have received such high levels of radiation from so far away.” He said the radiation levels corre sponded to those recorded after nu clear weapons’ tests in the atmo sphere during the 1970s. “I know of no earlier nuclear power plant acci dent which has lead to such high ra diation levels in this area,” he said. Neither Hungary nor any other Eastern European country, much closer to the plant site than Scandi navia, made public reports of radia tion level increases. “The increased Swedish levels were between three and four times the normal,” information director Lennart Franzon at the Forsmark nuclear plant north of Stockholm told the AP. In Finland the increased radia tion, first noticed Sunday night, were 10 times higher than those in Sweden, said Gunnar Bengtsson, head of Sweden’s Radiation and Nu clear Safety Board. Danish and Norwegian officials reported more modest increases. Franzon said an analysis of the ra dioactive emission will take a few days to conclude, but that a prelimi nary report indicated graphite and cesium 137 were present. The Soviet acknowledgement of the accident came many hours after Swedish officials had started hunt ing for the source of the increased radiation levels, which were first dis covered on Monday morning at a routine check of a worker at the Forsmark plant, 750 miles northwest of Kiev. Birgitta Dahl, Sweden’s energy minister, said the Soviets were asked — Looking Up A bird soars toward the upper ramps of Texas A&M’s Kyle Field. i mosecutor says consul knew of plan t*hoto by Dean Saito ‘Libyans at embassy aid terrorists’ [ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Em- jjloyees of Libya’s embassy supplied and grenades with which two Li- Bans planned to attack a U.S. mili- Iry officers’ club in Ankara during [wedding party, a prosecutor said Monday. Ifhe grenades were brought into Jj iBurkey under cover of diplomatic ‘Titmmity, Ulku Coskun told The jssociated Press in an interview. He Would not elaborate, but said Ali Zeyyani, Libyan consul in Istanbul, knew of the plan. Two Libyans identified as Ali Ecefli Ramadan and Recep Muhtar Rohoma Tarhuni, both 30, were captured April 18 near the officers’ club in the residential district of Ga- ziosmanpasa and questioned for nine days. They were arrested formally Sun day and charged with conspiracy to kill a group of people and illegally bringing weapons into the country. Authorities have said two Libyans were seen loitering 45 yards from the club the evening of April 18, three days after U.S. air raids on Li bya. They ran when police ordered them to halt, tossing away a bag con taining six hand grenades, and an other team of police caught them nearby. The U.S. officers’ club in this NATO-member nation was filled with about 100 people attending a wedding and just one of the Soviet- for an extensive report and added: “They should immediately have warned us.” She said initial inquiries drew the response that Soviet officials were not aware of a radiation leak, but she said the questions probably led to the unusual Soviet confirmation of the accident. “We must demand higher safety standards in the Soviet Union,” she said, and Sweden may insist that the Soviet civil nuclear program be over seen by the International Atomic Energy Agency, a U.N. agency. White House spokesman Edward Djerejian said: “It.must be very se rious if the Soviets talk about it.” Soviet media seldom report natu ral disasters or accidents unless inju ries and damage are widespread. The first, brief Tass announce ment did not give details beyond say ing, “Measures are being under taken to eliminate the consequences of the accident. Aid is being given to those affected.” A subsequent Tass report called it the first such accident in the Soviet Union, “although in other countries similar incidents have occurred more than once.” Tass mentioned the 1979 accident at Three Mile Island in Pennsylva nia, the worst accident at a U.S. com- See Soviets, page 6 Faculty Senate OKs recommendations to aid minorities manufactured grenades could have killed or injured half of them, Cos kun said. Coskun said the security court, which handles terrorism cases, did not press charges against two Li byans picked up for questioning af ter the initial interrogation of the two suspects but they remain in de tention pending possible future ac tion. He identified them as Ali Ab- dulhadi Shalmi and Bashir el- Mabruk Ibrahim. By Sondra Pickard Staff Writer The Faculty Senate on Monday unanimously approved recommen dations that seek to improve the situ ation of minority faculty and stu dents at Texas A&M. In spring 1984, the senate estab lished the Senate Committee on Mi nority Conditions with the objective of monitoring and supporting equal opportunity and treatment of mi nority faculty and students at A&M. After over two years of in-depth research, the committee found the minority situation at A&M inade quate in several areas. Sen. Stephen Fulling, professor of mathematics and co-chair of the committee, said, “This is our day to put our money where our mouths are. Today we present you with seve ral resolutions to improve the status of blacks and Hispanics on this cam pus. “The report is not the issue, but the problem is in the report.” According to the committee’s findings, some recommendations of the 1982 and 1983 President’s Com mittee on Minority Committee al ready have been implemented, but the student and faculty minority representation relative to all Texas public senior institutions has de clined and funding available for scholarships to minority students on the graduate and undergraduate levels is no longer competitive. The senate urges: • That the Board of Regents ap prove more funding and implement the committee’s recommendations as well as those of the president’s com mittee. • An appointment of a special as sistant to the provost-vice president for academic affairs whose primary role would be to carry out the rec ommendations unhampered by bu reaucratic chores. • An increase in the number of minority graduate fellowships. • An increase in the number of minority undergraduate schol arships, making them competitive with those of the University of Texas at Austin. • That the attorney general be requested to ask the U.S. Office of Committee suggests changes in tenure policy By Sondra Pickard Staff Writer The Faculty Senate Monday heard a report suggesting a new, broad set of criteria for evaluat ing faculty members for promo tion and tenure. The senate also voted to ex tend the landscape architecture undergraduate program from four to five years. Since February 1985, the sen ate Committee on Tenure and Promotion has been working on a set of suggestions they hope will improve existing A&M policy on faculty promotion and tenure by giving faculty more individual rights. The committee is recommend ing that the University expand its traditional areas of evaluation — teaching, research and service — from three to five. The two proposed areas are dissemination of knowledge and creative work and consulting and practice. Also, the committee hopes to achieve a uniform evaluation See Report, page 6 Education to reconsider the State of Texas Plan’s minority counting tech nique. The Texas Plan requires uni versities to increase their minority representation, but it mandates that universities count only minority stu dents who have graduated from Texas public high schools or only minority graduate students from See Faculty, page 6 11 ■56 Abu Nidal’s group claims It killed British ■ BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — The radical terrorist: group Abu Nidal claimed respon- ibility Monday for killing a British tourist in Jerusalem. In a separate development, |vo Cypriot students were reported miss ing in kidnap-plagued west Beirut. Police identified the Cypriots as Panikos irkides and Stavros Yiannakis, both 25, of icosia. Both are engineering students at the American University of Beirut. They left together Monday morning Jrom the New Hamra Hotel where they lived in the Moslem sector of the Lebanese lapital, but they never arrived at school, olice said. By Monday night, no one had ilaitned responsibility for taking the pair, authorities said. A hotel spokesman said late Monday [hat neither of the two Cypriots returned :o their rooms, where their passports and residence permits were found. A school of ficial also confirmed their disappearance. The Lebanese Foreign Ministry said the Netherlands was closing its embassy in Moslem west Beirut because of the wave of kidnappings and murders since the Ameri can raids April 15 on Tripoli and Beng hazi. All Dutch nationals are to be evac uated from the Moslem sector. At least 15 foreigners, including four Americans, seven Frenchmen, one Briton, one Irishman, one Italian and one South Korean have been kidnapped or are miss ing in Lebanon since 1984. Earlier Monday, Abu Nidal’s group claimed it killed British tourist Paul Ap pleby in Jerusalem in revenge for the U.S. air raids on Libya two weeks ago. The United States blames the Palestinian faction leader for the Dec. 27 massacres at the Rome and Vienna airports, in which 20 people were killed, and accuses Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy of harboring him. A typewritten statement delivered to a Western news agency in Moslem west Bei rut claimed that Appleby was on a spy mis sion Sunday when gunmen of Abu Nidal’s Fatah-Revolutionary Council shot him down. “The Monzer Kadry squad that operates in the Jerusalem district has carried out the death sentence against Briton Paul Ap pleby in the heart of Jerusalem while he was on an intelligence mission disguised behind a false (tourist) pretense,” said the terrorist statement, which was in Arabic. Palestinian sources in Beirut said Kadry probably was an Abu Nidal follower killed in action, but they had no specific informa tion about him. According to the statement, Appleby’s murder was “retaliation for the complicity o the Thatcher government in the U.S. im perialist aggression on Libya.” The refer ence was to the British government of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, which supported the U.S. raids. It did not give the number of terrorists involved, but said all “returned safely to base.” The statement was dated April 28 and signed Fatah-Revolutionary Council, the group Abu Nidal formed when he broke with Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat’s mainstream Fatah guerrilla group in 1974. The PLO has sen tenced him to death in absentia. Two other terrorist groups believed tourist linked to Abu Nidal claim to have killed three kidnapped Britons and an American in the past two weeks in retaliation for the raid. The bodies of the American and two Britons were found April 17 beside a mountain road east of Beirut. A videotape said to show the body of the other Briton hanging from a gallows as delivered to a Beirut newspaper last week, but no body has been found. Westerners fled the capital’s Moslem sec tor because of the killings and most of them left Lebanon. Diplomatic sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said about 100 Americans, Britons, Frenchmen, Italians, Swedes, Irishmen and New Zea landers were evacuated in the past 10 days.